Thinking with paint troubling settler colonialism through early childhood art pedagogies / Vanessa Clark, Veronica Pacini-Ketchabaw, and B. Denise Hodgins [electronic resource] :

By: Clark, VanessaContributor(s): Pacini-Ketchabaw, Veronica | Hodgins, B. DeniseMaterial type: ArticleArticlePublication details: 2014Description: 1 online resource (p. 751-781) : digital file, PDFSubject(s): Early childhood education -- Art | First Nations -- ColonizationOnline resources: Full text In: International Journal of Child, Youth, and Family Studies Vol. 5, no. 4.2 (2014), p. 751-781 Abstract: In this paper we think with the specificities of paint to tell stories about entanglements of settler colonialism and paint and painting in early childhood art education. We see to become implicated (Razack, 1998) within settler colonialism in the context we now call Canada. We paint a messy non-linear picture of our work with children through a process of storytelling. Through complex pictures of how we are attempting (even if partially and imperfectly) to respond and stay with the trouble our stories bring forward, we gesture toward hope and decolonizing strategies. Our work takes inspiration from contemporary artists and from anti-racist and Indigenous scholars.
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In this paper we think with the specificities of paint to tell stories about entanglements of settler colonialism and paint and painting in early childhood art education. We see to become implicated (Razack, 1998) within settler colonialism in the context we now call Canada. We paint a messy non-linear picture of our work with children through a process of storytelling. Through complex pictures of how we are attempting (even if partially and imperfectly) to respond and stay with the trouble our stories bring forward, we gesture toward hope and decolonizing strategies. Our work takes inspiration from contemporary artists and from anti-racist and Indigenous scholars.

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